Best known for his “New Topographics” landscapes, Lewis Baltz turned his lens indoors in the early 1990s to observe the sterile environments of the information revolution. “89-91 Sites of Technology” explores the clinical interiors of laboratories and offices in Europe and Japan. These “non-places” are notably devoid of human labor, presenting a detached, anesthetic view of late capitalist infrastructure where technology becomes invisible and incomprehensible.